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Bill

LC 2272

Generally revise laws related to posting contamination of residencies contaminated but residual contamination

2025 Regular Session

LC 2272 aims to revise posting requirements for contaminated residences, affecting notices and enforcement for properties with contamination or residual contamination.

(LC) Draft Died in Process
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Bill Summary · LC 2272

Summary of LC 2272 — Generally revise laws related to posting contamination of residencies contaminated but residual contamination

Overview

LC 2272 is a draft bill categorized under Environmental Protection. Its stated aim, by title alone, is to generally revise laws related to posting contamination of residences that are contaminated or carry residual contamination. The available information does not include the bill’s full text, so specific provisions cannot be listed.

Key Facts

  • Bill Number: LC 2272
  • Title: Generally revise laws related to posting contamination of residencies contaminated but residual contamination
  • Subject: Environmental Protection
  • Introduced: December 7, 2024
  • Status: (LC) Draft Died in Process
  • Legislative Actions:
    • 2024-12-07: Drafter Assigned
    • 2025-05-22: Draft Died in Process

Purpose and scope (inferred from the title)

  • The bill appears designed to revise existing statutes concerning posting or posting-related requirements for residences that are contaminated or have residual contamination.
  • The language suggests a focus on how contamination is defined for posting purposes and how notices are to be issued, displayed, or enforced for affected residences.

Note: The exact definitions, standards, and procedures are not provided in the available summary.

Known Provisions (not available)

  • No text or section-by-section summary is provided. Therefore, specific changes to current law, thresholds for contamination, posting formats, compliance timelines, enforcement mechanisms, penalties, or interactions with remediation requirements cannot be stated here.

Potential impact (general considerations)

  • If enacted, the bill could affect property owners, tenants, and property managers by altering notice/posting requirements for contaminated residences.
  • Local governments and environmental or health departments might be responsible for enforcing revised posting rules.
  • Clarity around what constitutes “contamination” and “residual contamination” would influence compliance and remediation timelines.
  • Without the text, it is unclear whether the bill would introduce new penalties, funding mechanisms, or transition provisions.

Affected parties

  • Residents and occupants of affected residences
  • Property owners and landlords
  • Local health and environmental agencies
  • Real estate professionals and developers
  • Environmental remediation and consulting entities

Procedural timeline and status

  • Introduced: December 7, 2024
  • Drafting action: December 7, 2024
  • Status update: May 22, 2025 — Draft Died in Process
  • Current status: The bill did not advance beyond the draft stage in this session; no further actions are recorded.

Next steps for readers

  • To understand the bill’s exact impact, access to the full fiscal/legislative analysis and the complete text of LC 2272 would be required.
  • If desired, you can monitor or request updates from the relevant legislative site or committee for any reintroduction or amended versions in future sessions.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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